egg

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Among all forms of animal life, the spermatozoa proceed from the male sex, and the egg is the product of the female.

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Definitions (50)

Toggle American Heritage definitions American Heritage Dictionary (11)

  1. noun A female gamete; an ovum. Also called egg cell.
  2. noun The round or oval female reproductive body of various animals, including birds, reptiles, amphibians, fishes, and insects, consisting usually of an embryo surrounded by nutrient material and a protective covering.
  3. noun The oval, thin-shelled reproductive body of a bird, especially that of a hen, used as food.

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Examples (50)

  • But, anyhow, it laid an egg, and the egg was a piece of jade, green with milky whiteness running through it, and exquisitely carved with what appeared to be outré symbolism. —  JULY, 1953 VOL
  • At the bottom of the egg was a circular stage, currently empty; tiers of white leather booths were arranged around it, occupied by prosperous-looking men and beautiful women whose conversations blended into a soft rustling that floated upon a bed of gentle, undulant music. —  F ;SF; - vol 100 issue 03 - March 2001
  • And the words we saw upon the egg were these: REST IN PEACE. —  I SING THE BODY ELECTRIC! - Ray Bradbury
  • Splitting up the egg is a task left to you and your friends.
  • But let's not forget that the egg is actually at its best when it's, well, edible. —  NY Daily News
 

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Etymologies (5)

Toggle American Heritage etymologies American Heritage Dictionary (2)

  1. Middle English egge, bird's egg, from Old Norse egg; see awi- in Indo-European roots.
  2. Middle English eggen, from Old Norse eggja; see ak- in Indo-European roots.

Toggle Century etymologies Century Dictionary (3)

  1. from Middle English egge, plural egges, eggis (of Scandinavian origin, from Icelandic egg, etc., below), parallel with Middle English ey, eye, ay, ai, plural eyren, eiren, ayren, eren, etc. (this form, which disappeared in the first half of the 16th century, would have given modern English *ay, riming with day, etc.), of native origin: namely, from Anglo-Saxon æg, rarely æig (in comp. also æger-), plural ægru, = Dutch ei = Middle Low German ei, eig, Low German ei = Old High German ei, plural eigir, Middle High German ei, German ei, plural eier, = Icelandic egg = Swedish ägg = Danish æg = Gothic (Moesogothic) *addjis (?), Crimean Gothic (Moesogothic) ada = Old Irish og, Irish ugh = Gaelic ubh = Welsh wy = Latin ōvum, later ŏvum (later Italian uovo = Spanish huevo = Portuguese ovo = Provencal ov, uov, ueu = Old French oef, French æuf), = Greek ᾠόν, in older forms ω῎ιον, ω῎εον, dial. ω῎βεον, orig. *ὠΝόν (New Greek αὐγον, also ὠόν), = Old Bulgarian jaje (orig. *āvje?) = Bulgarian jajce = Servian Polish jaje = Bohemian vejce = Russian (diminutive) yaitse, an egg. The orig. form of the word is uncertain; not found in Sanskrit, etc.
  2. from egg, n.
  3. from Middle English eggen, incite, urge on, instigate (in either good or bad sense), from Icelandic eggja = Swedish egga, upp-egga = Danish egge, opegge, incite, egg, literally ‘edge,’ from Icelandic egg = Swedish egg = Danish egg = Anglo-Saxon ecg, English edge: see edge, n., and edge, v., a doublet of egg.
 

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/ɛg/
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